วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 2 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Private schools fuel division in society, politics and pay, says study

Survey reveals attitudes

government perceived social apartheid dislocated powerful "elite" of the population

private education perpetuates a form of "social apartheid" and led to a political class drawn from a "separate elite" who does not understand or share the views of most people The annual British Social Attitudes survey warned Wednesday.

The study, conducted by the National Centre for Social Research (CNRS), which examines a representative sample of over 3300 people a year, also found that the televised debates during the election campaign not to excite voters that the NHS is a historical recording of its satisfaction ratings, and just before the riots broke out, six in 10 respondents said that most young people were "responsible and well behaved."

However, the investigation over controversial analysis centers on why the class is more important than ever in British life looking at the background education of the respondents for the first time.

From there, the researchers could identify a "sense of superiority bonus" that comes from attending a private school.

This "superiority" is manifested in the belief that private schools give a higher position in the ladder of life.

After examining family history, the study found that private education is still almost twice as likely than public school students themselves as middle class or upper middle.

The

. Private education have also built a bias in the value of the work of "Best" higher than the others, because the captains of industry and the ministers were "people like us" This trend is particularly pronounced when considering how much people must pay.

When asked how the president of the company must earn on average, educated Private suggested an average figure of £ 237,000 per year, £ 88,000 above the average level of which they were proposed for public schools.

state level higher education also had more to do with social inequality. Private schools, the NCSR said, "produces conservative supporters."

The report also highlights the social divide in the center of government. The Prime Minister is a son of Eton a stockbroker who married the daughter of a baronet, his deputy attended Westminster School and the Foreign Minister to school in St. Paul. Across the government, two thirds of the ministers were educated privately. The NCSR said that studies the past decade have shown that over half of senior officials attended private schools and the vast majority of senior judges are educated privately.

The report said: "The domain name in the current government of the people who comes from a separate elite can only add to concerns that did not understand or do not share the views of the great majority of the population seeks to represent. "

The report also highlights a growing disenchantment with politics. Only 20% trust the government to put national interests above their own political party "mostly" -. 33% in 1997 and 47% in 1987


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